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A Cabinet of Rarities: Antiquarian Obsessions And The Spell Of Death
Coles
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A Cabinet of Rarities: Antiquarian Obsessions And The Spell Of Death in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $47.50

Coles
A Cabinet of Rarities: Antiquarian Obsessions And The Spell Of Death in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $47.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
For bibliophiles, print collectors,
and connoisseurs, and anyone
whose imagination is fired by
the macabre and the arcane:
contemporary etchings recreating
interiors, studios,
cityscapes, landscapes, and
fantastical compositions
from a Piranesian world
The manifestation of a collector’s appetite for discovering and mastering the
world—represented by singular items of natural history, geology, art, or
relics—cabinets of curiosities and rarities became popular in the Renaissance
and were precursors to the modern museum.
Largely inspired by seventeenth-century scientist and antiquary Sir Thomas
Browne, whose esoteric writings have long appealed to scholars, this rare
new work is a bibliophile’s delight. Erik Desmazières’s contemporary etchings
present a cabinet of rarities portraying a collection of the recondite, rare, and
bizarre, complete with emblems of the vanity of earthly life and intimations
of mortality. Death and decay are favorite subjects: a skull recalls depictions
of Sir Thomas Browne’s own, disinterred and displayed in a local museum
until the 1920s. These abstruse objects and specters of death, subject matter
once considered the preserve of specialists, have entered the cultural mainstream
and have found a broad popular audience.
For bibliophiles, print collectors,
and connoisseurs, and anyone
whose imagination is fired by
the macabre and the arcane:
contemporary etchings recreating
interiors, studios,
cityscapes, landscapes, and
fantastical compositions
from a Piranesian world
The manifestation of a collector’s appetite for discovering and mastering the
world—represented by singular items of natural history, geology, art, or
relics—cabinets of curiosities and rarities became popular in the Renaissance
and were precursors to the modern museum.
Largely inspired by seventeenth-century scientist and antiquary Sir Thomas
Browne, whose esoteric writings have long appealed to scholars, this rare
new work is a bibliophile’s delight. Erik Desmazières’s contemporary etchings
present a cabinet of rarities portraying a collection of the recondite, rare, and
bizarre, complete with emblems of the vanity of earthly life and intimations
of mortality. Death and decay are favorite subjects: a skull recalls depictions
of Sir Thomas Browne’s own, disinterred and displayed in a local museum
until the 1920s. These abstruse objects and specters of death, subject matter
once considered the preserve of specialists, have entered the cultural mainstream
and have found a broad popular audience.


















